-
1 rank
A n1 (in military, police) grade m ; (in company, politics) rang m ; ( social status) rang m ; of high/low rank de haut/bas rang ; to pull rank abuser de son rang ;2 ( line) ( of people) rang m ; ( of objects) rangée f ; rank upon rank of soldiers des rangs de soldats ; to arrange [sth] in ranks disposer [qch] en rangées [toy soldiers] ; to break ranks lit [soldiers] rompre les rangs ; fig [politicians] se rebeller ; to close ranks (against) lit, fig serrer les rangs (contre) ;4 Ling rang m ;1 Mil, Pol, Ind rangs mpl ; to be in the ranks Mil être dans les rangs ; to rise through the ranks sortir du rang ; a leader chosen from the ranks of the party un dirigeant choisi dans les rangs du parti ; the ranks of the unemployed/of the homeless les rangs des chômeurs/des sans-abri ; to be reduced to the ranks Mil être dégradé ;2 ( echelons) échelons mpl ; to rise through the ranks of the civil service gravir les échelons de la fonction publique.C adj1 ( absolute) péj ( for emphasis) [outsider, beginner] complet/-ète ; [favouritism, injustice, stupidity] flagrant ;2 ( foul) [odour] fétide ;3 ( exuberant) [ivy, weeds] envahissant ; to be rank with weeds [garden] être envahi par les mauvaises herbes.E vtr1 ( classify) [person] classer [player, novel, restaurant] (among parmi ; above au-dessus de ; below au-dessous de) ; to be ranked third in the world être classé troisième au niveau mondial ;F vi1 ( rate) se classer ; how do I rank compared to her? où est-ce que je me classe or situe par rapport à elle? ; to rank as a great composer être considéré comme un grand compositeur ; to rank among ou with the champions être classé parmi les or au nombre des champions ; to rank above/below/alongside sb occuper un rang supérieur/inférieur/égal à qn ; this has to ou must rank as one of the worst films I've ever seen c'est un des films les pires que j'aie jamais vus ; that doesn't rank very high on my list of priorities cela ne figure pas très haut dans ma liste de priorités ; -
2 degrade
transitive verb(abase) erniedrigen; herabsetzen [Ansehen, Maßstab]* * *[di'ɡreid](to disgrace or make contemptible: He felt degraded by having to ask for money.) erniedrigen- academic.ru/19257/degrading">degrading* * *de·grade[dɪˈgreɪd]I. vt▪ to \degrade sb/oneself jdn/sich erniedrigen2. (destroy)▪ to \degrade sth environment, area etw angreifento \degrade an area of natural beauty eine schöne Naturlandschaft verschandeln3. GEOL▪ to \degrade sth etw erodieren5. CHEM▪ to \degrade sth etw abbauen▪ to \degrade sb jdn degradierenII. vi2. CHEM* * *[dI'greɪd]1. vterniedrigen; (ESP MIL = lower in rank) degradieren; (GEOL) erodieren; (CHEM) abbauenI wouldn't degrade myself by doing that — ich würde mich nicht dazu erniedrigen, das zu tun
2. vi(CHEM: break down) sich abbauen* * *degrade [dıˈɡreıd]A v/t1. MIL, KATH degradieren2. verderben, korrumpieren, entarten lassen3. degradieren, herabwürdigen, erniedrigen ( alle:into, to zu), in Schande bringen4. vermindern, herabsetzen, schwächen5. verschlechtern7. GEOL abtragen, erodieren8. CHEM zerlegen, abbauenB v/i1. (ab)sinken2. BIOL degenerieren, entarten* * *transitive verb(abase) erniedrigen; herabsetzen [Ansehen, Maßstab]* * *v.herabsetzen v. -
3 degrade
de·grade [dɪʼgreɪd] vt1) (debase, defile)to \degrade sb/ oneself jdn/sich erniedrigen2) ( destroy)to \degrade sth environment, area etw angreifen;to \degrade an area of natural beauty eine schöne Naturlandschaft verschandeln3) geolto \degrade sth etw erodieren5) chemto \degrade sth etw abbauento \degrade sb jdn degradieren vi2) chemto \degrade into sth zu etw dat abgebaut werden -
4 degrade
[di΄greid] v աստիճանազրկել, իջեց նել. այլասերվել. վատթարանալ. degrade smb in rank աստիճանազրկել. degrade oneself ստորանալ. Don’t degrade yourself Մի ստորա ցիր/ստորաց րու քեզ -
5 degrade
1) прийти́ в упа́док, дегради́ровать2) пони́зить, разжа́ловать ( in rank) -
6 to be stripped of one's rank
Mil. être dégradéEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > to be stripped of one's rank
-
7 regrado
rĕ-grădo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. [re-gradus].I.To degrade in rank, set back, lower (late Lat.), Hier. adv. Johan. Hieros. 19;II.Novel. Theod. 2, 21, 1: usque ad decimum locum regradari,
Cod. Just. 12, 17, 3:sacerdotes qui peccaverant regradantur in aedituos,
Hier. in Jovin. 2, 28.—To bring back into the former order, to rearrange as before (by intercalation), Sol. 1, 45. -
8 деградирам
degrade, downgrade, demote, reduce in rank* * *деградѝрам,гл. degrade; downgrade, demote, reduce in rank.* * *degrade* * *degrade; downgrade, demote, • reduce in rank -
9 degradieren
v/t MIL. demote (zu to the rank of); fig. degrade (zu to)* * *to demote; to downgrade; to degrade* * *de|gra|die|ren [degra'diːrən] ptp degradiertvt (MIL)to demote ( zu to); (fig = herabwürdigen) to degradejdn/etw zu etw degradíéren (fig) — to lower sb/sth to the level of sth
* * *1) (to reduce to a lower rank: He was demoted for misconduct.) demote2) (to reduce to a lower level, especially of importance: His job was downgraded.) downgrade* * *de·gra·die·ren *[degraˈdi:rən]vtjdn zum einfachen Soldaten \degradieren to demote sb to the ranks2. (pej geh) to degrade sb, to reduce sb to [the level of] sth* * *transitives Verb demotejemanden/etwas zu etwas degradieren — (fig.) reduce somebody/something to [the level of] something
* * *zu to the rank of); fig degrade (zu to)* * *transitives Verb demotejemanden/etwas zu etwas degradieren — (fig.) reduce somebody/something to [the level of] something
* * *v.to demote v.to downgrade v. -
10 degradar
v.1 to degrade, to debase (moralmente).Sus amigos degradaron a Ricardo His friends degraded Richard.Ricardo degradó la leche por dinero Richard downgraded the milk for money.El general degradó al soldado vago The general degraded the lazy soldier.2 to demote.* * *1 to degrade, debase2 MILITAR to demote1 to demean oneself, degrade oneself* * *1. VT1) (=deteriorar) [+ salud] to cause to deteriorate; [+ litoral] to spoil; [+ calidad] to lower, make worse2) (Mil) to demote, downgrade3) (Inform) [+ datos] to corrupt4) (Geol) [+ suelo] to impoverish2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (Mil) to demoteb) ( envilecer) to degradec) ( empeorar) <calidad/valor> to diminish2) (Art) to gradate2.degradarse v prona) persona ( humillarse) to demean oneself, degrade oneselfb) (Quím) compuesto to decompose, degrade* * *= cheapen, debase, downgrade [down-grade], degrade, demean, demote, abase.Ex. Simplification is cheapening the process.Ex. As American industry has conclusively proven, the most direct way to cut costs is to debase the quality of the product.Ex. The opposite of the 'halo effect' -- downgrading someone you dislike but whose work is good -- is also an error.Ex. In point of fact, I am well aware that catalogers, as a group, resist with every cell in their bodies any attempt to erode or degrade or compromise the catalog.Ex. While there have been some praiseworthy improvements over the past few years, many biased headings persist which demean the very people who use the catalog.Ex. Supervisors may have to take such action as demoting or terminating an employee.Ex. Fairy tales not abased by the 'culture industry' might save us from our present state of barbarism resulting from a capitalism run wild.----* degradarse = degrade.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (Mil) to demoteb) ( envilecer) to degradec) ( empeorar) <calidad/valor> to diminish2) (Art) to gradate2.degradarse v prona) persona ( humillarse) to demean oneself, degrade oneselfb) (Quím) compuesto to decompose, degrade* * *= cheapen, debase, downgrade [down-grade], degrade, demean, demote, abase.Ex: Simplification is cheapening the process.
Ex: As American industry has conclusively proven, the most direct way to cut costs is to debase the quality of the product.Ex: The opposite of the 'halo effect' -- downgrading someone you dislike but whose work is good -- is also an error.Ex: In point of fact, I am well aware that catalogers, as a group, resist with every cell in their bodies any attempt to erode or degrade or compromise the catalog.Ex: While there have been some praiseworthy improvements over the past few years, many biased headings persist which demean the very people who use the catalog.Ex: Supervisors may have to take such action as demoting or terminating an employee.Ex: Fairy tales not abased by the 'culture industry' might save us from our present state of barbarism resulting from a capitalism run wild.* degradarse = degrade.* * *degradar [A1 ]vtA1 ( Mil) to demote2 (envilecer) to degradeestas prácticas degradan al ser humano these practices are degrading to human beings3 (empeorar) ‹calidad/valor› to diminishel suelo está excesivamente degradado the soil is too impoverished4 ( Quím) ‹compuesto› to degradeB ( Art) to gradate1 «persona» (humillarse) to demean oneself, degrade oneself, humiliate oneself2 ( Quím) «compuesto» to decompose, degrade* * *
degradar ( conjugate degradar) verbo transitivoa) (Mil) to demote
degradarse verbo pronominal [ persona] to demean oneself, degrade oneself
degradar verbo transitivo
1 to degrade: esos actos de barbarie le degradan, he had degraded himself by committing such barbaric acts
2 (en una jerarquía) to demote
' degradar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
denigrar
English:
debase
- degrade
- rank
- cheapen
- demean
- demote
* * *♦ vt1. [moralmente] to degrade, to debase;el alcohol la ha degradado she's been ruined by drink2. [físicamente] [medio ambiente, naturaleza] to degrade;[calidad, servicio, producto] to cause to deteriorate;la contaminación degrada el medio ambiente pollution degrades the environment3. [de mando militar, cargo] to demote, to downgrade* * *v/t1 degrade2 MIL demote3 PINT gradate* * *degradar vt1) : to degrade, to debase2) : to demote -
11 понижавам
1. lower, reduce; debaserelegate (до to)(служебно) reduce in rank/status, degrade, downgradeпонижавам гласа си drop/lower/hush o.'s voiceпонижавам цени lower/reduce/cut prices2. муз. flatten, ( при пеене) sing flatпонижавам се go down, drop, fallнастроението се понижи the spirits fellцените са се понижили prices have dropped* * *понижа̀вам,гл.1. lower, reduce; debase; relegate (до to); ( служебно) reduce in rank/status, declass, degrade, downgrade, demote; sl. kick downstairs; ( качество, стойност) debase; \понижавам гласа си drop/lower/hush o.’s voice;\понижавам се go down, drop, fall.* * *lower: Our company will понижавам the prices of our products. - Компанията ни ще понижи цените на нашите продукти.; reduce: понижавам in rank - понижавам в длъжност; abase; demote{di`mout}; depress; discount; disrate{dis`reit}; drop: The temperatures have понижавамped. - Температурите са се понижили.; go down; slash{slES}* * *1. (служебно) reduce in rank/ status, degrade, downgrade 2. lower, reduce;debase 3. relegate (до to) 4. ПОНИЖАВАМ ce go down, drop, fall 5. ПОНИЖАВАМ гласа си drop/lower/hush o.'s voice 6. ПОНИЖАВАМ цени lower/ reduce/cut prices 7. муз. flatten, (при пеене) sing flat 8. настроението се понижи the spirits fell 9. цените са се понижили prices have dropped -
12 retrocedere
retreatfig lose ground* * *retrocedere v.tr.1 (mil.) to degrade, to reduce in rank, to reduce to a lower rank: fu retrocesso per insubordinazione, he was degraded for insubordination2 (dir.) to recede, to withdraw*3 (comm.) ( bonificare) to remit; ( rendere partecipe agli utili) to give* a share in profits to (s.o.): retrocedere una spesa, un debito, to remit a charge, a debt◆ v. intr. to retreat, to withdraw*, to fall* back, to recede (anche fig.): il nemico fu costretto a retrocedere, the enemy was forced to retreat; pensaci su bene, perché non ti sarà possibile retrocedere, think it over well because you will not be able to withdraw; retrocedere da una decisione, to go back on a decision; retrocedere da una posizione, un contratto, to withdraw from a position, a contract; i prezzi di mercato retrocedono, market prices are receding.* * *1. [retro'tʃɛdere]vb irreg vtMil to demote, Sport to relegate2. vi* * *[retro'tʃɛdere] 1.verbo transitivo2.1) (tornare indietro) to retreat, to back away, to move backwards, to pull backretrocedere da una decisione — fig. to go back on a decision
* * *retrocedere/retro't∫εdere/ [2, 30](aus. essere)1 (tornare indietro) to retreat, to back away, to move backwards, to pull back; retrocedere da una decisione fig. to go back on a decision -
13 dégrader
dégrader [degʀade]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = détériorer) to damageb. ( = avilir) [+ personne] to degrade2. reflexive verbb. [relations, situation, qualité, santé] to deteriorate ; [mémoire] to fail ; [pouvoir d'achat] to shrink* * *degʀade
1.
1) ( détériorer) to damage3) Art to shade [something] from dark to light [tons, couleurs]4) ( avilir) [vice] to degrade [personne]
2.
se dégrader verbe pronominal ( se détériorer) to deteriorate* * *deɡʀade vt1) MILITAIRE, [officier] to degrade2) (= abîmer) to damage3) (= avilir) to degrade, to debase* * *dégrader verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( détériorer) to damage [site, monument, environnement];3 Art to use [sth] in gradation [tons, couleurs];4 ( avilir) [vice] to degrade [personne].B se dégrader vpr1 ( se détériorer) [quartier, météo, situation, santé] to deteriorate;3 Phys [énergie] to degrade.[degrade] verbe transitif1. [abîmer] to damage3. [avilir] to degrade4. [couleurs] to shade (into one another)[lumières] to reduce gradually5. [cheveux] to layer6. MILITAIRE————————se dégrader verbe pronominal intransitif[meuble, bâtiment] to deteriorate[relation] to deteriorate[santé] to decline[temps] to get worse -
14 lower
I transitive verb1) (let down) herab-/hinablassen; einholen [Flagge, Segel]lower oneself into — hinuntersteigen in (+ Akk.) [Kanalschacht, Keller]
lower oneself into a chair — sich in einen Sessel sinken lassen
2) (reduce in height) senken [Blick]; niederschlagen [Augen]; absenken [Zimmerdecke]; auslassen [Saum]3) (lessen) senken [Preis, Miete, Zins usw.]4) (degrade) herabsetzenlower oneself to do something — sich so weit erniedrigen, etwas zu tun
5) (weaken) schwächen; dämpfen [Licht, Stimme, Lärm]II 1. comparative adjectivelower one's voice — leiser sprechen; die Stimme senken (geh.)
1) unter... [Nil, Themse usw., Atmosphäre]; Unter[jura, -devon usw., -arm, -lippe usw.]; Nieder[rhein, -kalifornien]2) (in rank) unter...lower mammals/plants — niedere Säugetiere/Pflanzen
2. comparative adverbthe lower orders/classes — die Unterschichten/die unteren Klassen
tiefer [sinken, hängen usw.]* * *1) (to make or become less high: She lowered her voice.) senken2) (to let down: He lowered the blinds.) herunterlassen* * *low·er1[ˈləʊəʳ, AM ˈloʊɚ]in the \lower back im unteren Rücken\lower floor untere Etage\lower jaw Unterkiefer m\lower lip Unterlippe fthe \lower reaches of the ocean die tieferen Regionen des Ozeansthe L\lower Rhine GEOG der NiederrheinII. vt1. (move downward)▪ to \lower sth etw herunterlassen▪ to \lower oneself:she \lowered herself into a chair sie ließ sich auf einem Stuhl niederthe miners \lowered themselves into the tunnel die Bergleute ließen sich in den Stollen hinunterto \lower one's arm/hands den Arm/die Hände senkento \lower one's eyes die Augen niederschlagen, den Blick senkento \lower one's head den Kopf senkento \lower a flag/the sails eine Fahne/die Segel einholento \lower the hem den Saum herauslassento \lower the landing gear das Fahrgestell ausfahrento \lower a lifeboat NAUT ein Rettungsboot zu Wasser lassen [o aussetzen]to \lower the periscope das Periskop einfahren2. (decrease)▪ to \lower sth etw verringern [o senken]his crude jokes \lowered the tone of the evening seine derben Witze drückten das Niveau des Abendsto \lower one's expectations/sights seine Erwartungen/Ansprüche zurückschraubento \lower one's guard seine Deckung vernachlässigento \lower the heat die Temperatur zurückdrehento \lower interest rates die Zinssätze senkento \lower prices/taxes die Preise/Steuern senkento \lower the quality die Qualität mindernto \lower one's voice seine Stimme senkento \lower one's standards seine Anforderungen zurückschrauben3. (demean)I wouldn't \lower myself to respond to his insults ich würde mich nicht auf sein Niveau begeben und auf seine Beleidigungen antwortenI'd never have expected him to \lower himself by stealing ich hätte nie gedacht, dass er so tief sinken könnte und stehlen würdelow·er2[laʊəʳ, AM laʊr]▪ to \lower at sb jdn finster ansehen* * *I ['ləʊə(r)]1. adj1) (in height) niedriger; part, half, limb, storey, latitude untere(r, s); note tiefer; (GEOG) Nieder-lower leg/arm — Unterschenkel m/-arm m
lower jaw/lip — Unterkiefer m/-lippe
hemlines are lower this year — die Röcke sind dieses Jahr länger
the lower deck (of bus) — das untere Deck; (of ship) das Unterdeck
a lower middle-class family — eine Familie aus der unteren Mittelschicht
the lower school — die unteren Klassen, die Unter- und Mittelstufe
See:→ lower sixth (form)2. advtiefer, leiser3. vt1) (= let down) boat, injured man, load herunterlassen; eyes, gun senken; mast umlegen; sail, flag einholen; bicycle saddle niedriger machen"lower the lifeboats!" —
"lower away!" — " holt ein!"
2) (= reduce) pressure, risk verringern; price, interest rates, cost, tone, temperature senken; morale, resistance schwächen; standard herabsetzenthat is no excuse for lowering the standards of service — das ist keine Entschuldigung dafür, den Service zu verschlechtern
to lower oneself — sich hinunterlassen; (socially) sich unter sein Niveau begeben
to lower oneself to do sth — sich herablassen, etw zu tun
4. visinken, fallen II ['laʊə(r)]viSee:= academic.ru/43910/lour">lour* * *lower1 [ˈlaʊə(r)] v/i1. finster oder drohend blicken:lower at sb jemanden finster oder drohend ansehenb) sich mit schwarzen Wolken überziehen (Himmel)lower2 [ˈləʊə(r)]A v/t1. eine Mauer etc niedriger machen2. die Augen, den Gewehrlauf etc, auch die Stimme, den Preis, die Temperatur etc senken, das Wahlalter etc auch herabsetzen3. fig erniedrigen:lower o.s.a) sich demütigen,b) sich herablassen4. abschwächen, mäßigen:lower one’s hopes seine Hoffnungen herabschrauben5. herunter-, herab-, niederlassen, FLUG das Fahrgestell ausfahren, eine Fahne, ein Segel niederholen, streichen; → flag1 A 1B v/i1. niedriger werden (auch fig)2. fig sinken, heruntergehen, fallenlower3 [ˈləʊə(r)]A komp von low1 AB adj1. niedriger (auch fig):a lower estimate eine niedrigere Schätzung2. unter(er, e, es), Unter…:3. GEOG Unter…, Nieder…:Lower Austria Niederösterreich n4. neuer, jünger (Datum):of a lower date jüngeren Datums5. BIOL nieder (Pflanzen etc)* * *I transitive verb1) (let down) herab-/hinablassen; einholen [Flagge, Segel]lower oneself into — hinuntersteigen in (+ Akk.) [Kanalschacht, Keller]
2) (reduce in height) senken [Blick]; niederschlagen [Augen]; absenken [Zimmerdecke]; auslassen [Saum]3) (lessen) senken [Preis, Miete, Zins usw.]4) (degrade) herabsetzenlower oneself to do something — sich so weit erniedrigen, etwas zu tun
5) (weaken) schwächen; dämpfen [Licht, Stimme, Lärm]II 1. comparative adjectivelower one's voice — leiser sprechen; die Stimme senken (geh.)
1) unter... [Nil, Themse usw., Atmosphäre]; Unter[jura, -devon usw., -arm, -lippe usw.]; Nieder[rhein, -kalifornien]2) (in rank) unter...lower mammals/plants — niedere Säugetiere/Pflanzen
2. comparative adverbthe lower orders/classes — die Unterschichten/die unteren Klassen
tiefer [sinken, hängen usw.]* * *adj.ausfahren (Fahrgestell) adj.klein adj.unterer adj. v.absenken (Grundwasserspiegel) v.niederlassen v. -
15 degradar
degradar ( conjugate degradar) verbo transitivoa) (Mil) to demotedegradarse verbo pronominal [ persona] to demean oneself, degrade oneself
degradar verbo transitivo
1 to degrade: esos actos de barbarie le degradan, he had degraded himself by committing such barbaric acts
2 (en una jerarquía) to demote ' degradar' also found in these entries: Spanish: denigrar English: debase - degrade - rank - cheapen - demean - demote -
16 ordo
ordo, ĭnis, m. [from root or-; Sanscr. ar-, to go, strive upward; cf. orior, through an adj. stem ordo-; v. Corss. Krit. Beitr. p. 108], a regular row, line, or series, methodical arrangement, order (class.; syn.: series, tenor).I.In gen.:B.ordinem sic definiunt compositionem rerum aptis et accommodatis locis,
Cic. Off. 1, 40, 142:vis ordinis et collocationis,
id. ib. 1, 40, 142:arbores in ordinem satae,
i. e. planted in a quincunx, Varr. R. R. 1, 7; cf. Cic. Caecil. 8, 22; id. Sen. 17, 59.—Esp., right order, regular succession:C.fatum appello ordinem seriemque causarum,
Cic. Div. 1, 55, 125:nihil esse pulchrius in omni ratione vitae dispositione atque ordine,
Col. 12, 2:adhibere modum quendam et ordinem rebus,
Cic. Off. 1, 5, 17:mox referam me ad ordinem,
will soon bring myself to order, return to order, id. Ac. 2, 20, 67:res in ordinem redigere,
to reduce to order, Auct. Her. 3, 9, 16; so,in ordinem adducere,
Cic. Univ. 3:ordinem conservare,
id. Rosc. Com. 2, 6:eundem tenere,
to preserve, id. Phil. 5, 13, 35:sequi,
id. Brut. 69, 244:immutare,
to change, id. Or. 63, 214:perturbare,
to disturb, id. Brut. 62, 223: cogere or redigere in ordinem, to reduce to order, to humble, degrade:decemviri querentes, se in ordinem cogi,
Liv. 3, 51; 3, 35; Plin. Ep. 1, 23, 1; Quint. 1, 4, 3; so,in ordinem redactus,
Suet. Vesp. 15; cf.trop.: gula reprimenda et quasi in ordinem redigenda est,
Plin. Ep. 2, 6, 5.—Adverb. expressions.1.Ordine, in ordinem, per ordinem, in ordine, ex ordine, in order, in turn:2.Hegioni rem enarrato omnem ordine,
Ter. Ad. 3, 2, 53; Plaut. Capt. 2, 3, 17; Ter. Heaut. 4, 3, 28:interrogare,
Cic. Part. 1, 2:tabulae in ordinem confectae,
id. Rosc. Com. 2, 6:ordine cuncta exposuit,
Liv. 3, 50, 4; 30, 15, 1:sortiti nocte singuli per ordinem,
Quint. 4, 2, 72:hos Corydon, illos referebat in ordine Thyrsis,
Verg. E. 7, 20; id. A. 8, 629:ut quisque aetate et honore antecedebat, ita sententiam dixit ex ordine,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 64, § 143:ordine se vocante,
when his turn came, Macr. S. 2, 2, § 12:in ordine vicis,
Vulg. Luc. 1, 8.—Ordine, regularly, properly, appropriately:3.omnia ut quidque Egisti ordine scio,
Plaut. Ps. 5, 2, 15:rem demonstravi ordine,
id. Mil. 3, 3, 2; id. Capt. 2, 3, 17 Brix ad loc.:an id recte, ordine, e re publicā factum esse defendes?
Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 84, § 194:si hoc recte atque ordine factum videtur,
id. Quint. 7, 28.—Ex ordine, in succession, without intermission:4.vendit Italiae possessiones ex ordine omnes,
Cic. Agr. 1, 2, 4:septem illum totos perhibent ex ordine menses Flevisse,
Verg. G. 4, 507; cf. id. A. 5, 773.—Extra ordinem.a.Out of course, in an unusual or extraordinary manner:b.extra ordinem decernere provinciam alicui,
Cic. Prov. Cons. 8, 19:crimina probantur,
in an illegal manner, Dig. 48, 1, 8.—Extraordinarily, i. e. uncommonly, eminently, especially:II.ad eam spem, quam extra ordinem de te ipso habemus, accedunt tua praecipua,
Cic. Fam. 6, 5, 3.—Transf. concr.A.In gen.1.Tres ordines lapidum, three courses of stones, Vulg. 3 Reg. 6, 36.—In building, a row, course, or layer of stones, etc.:2.obstructis in speciem portis singulis ordinibus caespitum,
Caes. B. G. 5, 51:alius insuper ordo adicitur,
id. ib. 7, 23: tot premit ordinibus caput, tiers or layers of ornaments, Juv. 6, 502. —A row of benches or seats:3.terno consurgunt ordine remi,
in three rows of oar-banks, Verg. A. 5, 120:sex ordinum navem invenit Xenagoras,
Plin. 7, 56, 57, § 208.—In the theatre, a row of seats: post senatores ex vetere instituto quatuordecim graduum ordines equestri ordini assignati fuere, Suet. [p. 1278] Aug. 44:sedisti in quatuordecim ordinibus,
Cic. Phil. 2, 18, 44.—A train of servants or attendants:B.comitum longissimus ordo,
Juv. 3, 284.—In milit. lang.1.A line or rank of soldiers in battle array:2.auxilia regis nullo ordine iter fecerant,
Caes. B. C. 2, 26:ne quisquam ordine egrederetur,
Sall. J. 45, 2:nullo ordine commutato,
id. ib. 101, 2:sine signis, sine ordinibus,
id. ib. 97, 5; so,signa atque ordines observare,
to keep the ranks, remain in line, id. ib. 51, 1:conturbare,
id. ib. 50, 4:restituere,
id. ib. 51, 3; Liv. 2, 50; 8, 8.—A band, troop, company of soldiers:3.viri fortissimi atque honestissimi, qui ordines duxerunt,
who have led companies, have been officers, Cic. Phil. 1, 8, 20:L. Pupius primipili centurio, qui hunc eundem ordinem in exercitu Pompeii antea duxerat,
Caes. B. C. 1, 13. —Hence,A captaincy, a command: ordinem alicui adimere, Tab. Heracl. ap. Mazoch. p. 423, n. 47; cf.(β).on the contrary: alicui assignare,
Liv. 42, 34:DARE,
Inscr. Orell. 3456:centuriones ad superiores ordines transducere,
Caes. B. G. 6, 40; cf. id. ib. 5, 4, 4.—Ordines, chieftains, captains:C.tribunis militum primisque ordinibus convocatis,
the captains of the first companies, Caes. B. G. 6, 7 fin.; Liv. 30, 4, 1.—In a polit. respect, an order, i. e. a rank, class, degree of citizens:2.et meus med ordo inrideat,
Plaut. Aul. 2, 2, 55.—In the time of Cicero there were three principal classes, ordo senatorius, equester, and plebeius:Fidiculanius cujus erat ordinis? senatoril,
Cic. Clu. 37, 104; id. Fl. 18, 43:proximus est huic dignitati equester ordo,
Cic. Dom. 28, 74; Suet. Aug. 41:inferiores loco, auctoritate, ordine,
Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 48, § 127: ordo amplissimus, i. e. the Senate:quem absentem in amplissimum ordinem cooptarunt,
id. Cael. 2, 5;also termed SPLENDIDISSIMVS ORDO,
Inscr. Orell. 1180; 1181; and simply ordo, the order, for the Senate:ordo Mutinensis,
Tac. H. 2, 52; Inscr. Grut. 425, 1:trecentos ex dediticiis electos utriusque ordinis,
i. e. of the two upper classes, Suet. Aug. 15.—In gen., a class, rank, station, condition:(β).mearum me rerum aequom'st novisse ordinem,
Plaut. Trin. 2, 4, 50:publicanorum,
Cic. Fam. 13, 9, 2:aratorum, pecuariorum, mercatorum,
id. Verr. 2, 2, 6, § 17:homo ornatissimus loco, ordine, nomine,
id. ib. 2, 1, 48, §127: libertini,
Suet. Gram. 18.—So in the inscrr.: SACERDOTVM, HARVSPICVM, etc., Grut. 320, 12; 304, 7; 302, 2 et saep.; so,grammatici alios auctores in ordinem redigerunt, alios omnino exemerant numero,
recognized among, placed in the rank of, Quint. 1, 4, 3.—Esp. (eccl. Lat.), an order in the church, an ecclesiastical rank or office:ordines sacerdotum et Levitarum,
Vulg. 2 Esdr. 13, 30:secundum ordinem Melchisedek,
id. Psa. 109, 5. -
17 downgrade
['daʊngreɪd]* * *verb (to reduce to a lower level, especially of importance: His job was downgraded.) retrocedere, declassare* * *downgrade /ˈdaʊngreɪd/n.4 (tecn.) ridimensionamento; versione ridotta(to) downgrade /ˌdaʊnˈgreɪd/v. t.1 ridimensionare (al livello di): The hurricane has been downgraded to a tropical storm, l'uragano è stato ridimensionato al livello di una tempesta tropicale2 abbassare di livello ( un dipendente, un funzionario, ecc.); declassare: He was downgraded to a lower rank, è stato declassato a una posizione inferiore; ( Borsa, fin.) The company's rating was downgraded from A+ to A, il rating della società è stato declassato da A+ ad A3 sminuire l'importanza di; minimizzare* * *['daʊngreɪd] -
18 demote
v понижать в должности, в звании; смещать с должностиСинонимический ряд:degrade (verb) break; bump; bust; cashier; declass; decrease; degrade; demerit; depress; disgrade; dismiss; disrate; downgrade; lessen; lower in rank; put down; reduce -
19 понижать
несовер. - понижать;
совер. - понизить( кого-л./что-л.) lower, reduce;
demoteпониж|ать -, понизить (вн.)
1. lower (smth.), reduce (smth.) ;
~ давление reduce/lessen pressure;
~ напряжение lower the voltage;
2. paзг. (по службе) degrade( smb.) ;
demote (smb.), reduce (smb.) in rank;
понизить голос lower one`s voice;
~аться, понизиться 1;
(стать более низким) become* lower, come* lower, descend a little;
3. (уменьшаться) be* reduced;
(о ценах тж.) fall*, drop:
4. (звучать ниже, тише) go* down, drop, sink*;
~ение с. reduction, cut;
(падение) drop, fall;
(показателя) down drift, downturn;
(пo службе) demotion, reduction in rank;
~ение зарплаты wage cut;
~ение цен reduction/cut in prices;
fall in prices;
~ение уровня воды fall/subsidence of the water-level;
~ение уровня шума кино, тлв. noise level reduction.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > понижать
-
20 cēnsor
cēnsor ōris, m [cf. censeo], the title of a Roman magistrate, instituted B.C. 443. The censors were two in number (usually patricians of high rank), elected in the Comitia Curiata, originally every five years. Their duties, which they swore to perform without favor or enmity, were to make a census of the people, giving the age, property, and class of each person; to exercise general control over public morals, with power to degrade any citizen to a lower rank, to expel senators, and deprive the equites of horses and rings; to administer, under direction of the Senate, the public finances, to construct and keep in repair public buildings, roads, and aqueducts, and to furnish victims for the sacrifices: Papirium Sempronium que censui agendo populus suffragiis praefecit; censores ab re appellati sunt, L.: video animadvertisse censores in iudices: cum Saturninum censor notasset: qui eum ex senatu censor eiecerat: quem censores senatu moverant, S.: quem censores aerarium reliquisse se subscripserunt. — Meton., the title of a magistrate in a colony or province, whose duties were similar to those of the censor at Rome: censores in Siciliā creati: iurati censores coloniarum, L.—Fig., a severe judge of morals, censurer, critic: pertristis: castigator censorque minorum, H.* * *censor, magistrate for registration/census; censurer, critic (behavior/books)
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
degrade — 1 Degrade, demote, reduce, declass, disrate mean to lower in station, rank, or grade. Degrade may be used of any such lowering {babies . . . degrade one to the state of anxious, fawning suppliants for a smile Wallace} {turkeys not in prime… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
degrade — [dē grād′, digrād′] vt. degraded, degrading [ME degraden < OFr degrader < LL degradare, to reduce in rank < L de , down + gradus: see DE & GRADE] 1. to lower in rank or status, as in punishing; demote 2. to lower or corrupt in quality,… … English World dictionary
Degrade — De*grade , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Degraded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Degrading}.] [F. d[ e]grader, LL. degradare, fr. L. de + gradus step, degree. See {Grade}, and cf. {Degree}.] 1. To reduce from a higher to a lower rank or degree; to lower in rank; to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
degrade — late 14c., from O.Fr. degrader (12c.) degrade, deprive (of office, rank, etc.), from des down (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + L. gradus step (see GRADE (Cf. grade)). Related: Degraded; degrading … Etymology dictionary
degrade — ► VERB 1) cause (someone) to suffer a loss of dignity or self respect. 2) lower the character or quality of. 3) archaic reduce to a lower rank. 4) cause to break down or deteriorate chemically. 5) Physics reduce (energy) to a less readily… … English terms dictionary
degrade — [c]/dəˈgreɪd / (say duh grayd) verb (degraded, degrading) –verb (t) 1. to reduce from a higher to a lower rank, degree, etc.; deprive of office, rank, degree, or title as a punishment. 2. to lower in character or quality; debase; deprave. 3. to… …
degrade — verb Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French degrader, from Late Latin degradare, from Latin de + gradus step, grade more at grade Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. a. to lower in grade, rank, or status ; demote … New Collegiate Dictionary
degrade — degrader, n. /di grayd / or, for 3, /dee grayd /, v., degraded, degrading. v.t. 1. to lower in dignity or estimation; bring into contempt: He felt they were degrading him by making him report to the supervisor. 2. to lower in character or… … Universalium
degrade — v 1. demote, downgrade, lower or reduce in rank, dismiss or remove from office, declass, break or strip of rank, disrate, cashier, Mil. drum out, Mil. Sl. bust, Inf. kick upstairs, disbar, defrock or unfrock; depose, unseat, dethrone, Rare.… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
degrade — Synonyms and related words: abase, abash, adulterate, alloy, belittle, boot, bounce, break, bring down, bring into discredit, bring low, bring shame upon, bump, bust, can, canker, cashier, cast down, cast reproach upon, cheapen, coarsen, confound … Moby Thesaurus
degrade — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. humiliate, shame, debase, demean; degenerate. See deterioration, disrepute. Ant., elevate, honor. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To humble] Syn. demote, discredit, diminish; see humble . 2. [To corrupt] Syn.… … English dictionary for students